Head of Communications at the Centre for Effective Altruism. Previously: News Editor at The Economist; journalist and growth manager at Protocol; journalist at Finimize.
Shakeel Hashim
EA Wins 2023
Why you’re not hearing as much from EA orgs as you’d like
Good things that happened in EA this year
Max is a phenomenal leader, and I’m very sad to see him go. He’s one of the most caring and humble people I’ve ever worked with, and his management and support during a very difficult few months has been invaluable. He’s also just a genuine delight to be around.
It’s deeply unfair that this job has taken a toll on him, and I’m very glad that he’s chosen the right thing for him.
Max has taught me so much, and I’ll be forever grateful for that. And I’m looking forward to continuing to work with him as an advisor — I know he’ll continue to be a huge help.
Should GiveWell still recommend GiveDirectly?
How CEA’s communications team is thinking about EA communications at the moment
Sorry for the slow response.
I wanted to clarify and apologise for some things here (not all of these are criticisms you’ve specifically made, but this is the best place I can think of to respond to various criticisms that have been made):
This statement was drafted and originally intended to be a short quote that we could send to journalists if asked for comment. On reflection, I think that posting something written for that purpose on the Forum was the wrong way to communicate with the community and a mistake. I am glad that we posted something, because I think that it’s important for community members to hear that CEA cares about inclusion, and (along with legitimate criticism like yours) I’ve heard from many community members who are glad we said something. But I wish that I had said something on the Forum with more precision and nuance, and will try to be better at this in future.
The first sentence was not meant to imply that we think that Bostrom disagrees with this view, but we can see why people would draw this implication. It’s included because we thought lots of people might get the impression from Bostrom’s email that EA is racist and I don’t want anyone — within or outside the community — to think that. Nevertheless this was sloppy, and is something that we should have caught when drafting it. Sorry.
We also intended the first sentence to have a meaning like Amber’s interpretation above, rather than the interpretation you had, but we agree that this is unclear. We’ve just edited the intro essay to make clearer that this is what we mean, and also to make clear that these principles are mostly more like “core hypotheses, but subject to revision” than “set in stone”.
This statement was intended as a reaction to Bostrom’s initial email (CW that this link includes a racial slur). I agree that if we had linked to that email it would have been clearer, and at the time I posted it I didn’t even consider that this might be ambiguous. Sorry.
More generally, we’re thinking about how we can improve our responses to situations like this in the future. I’m also planning to write up more about our overall approach to comms (TL;DR is that I agree with various concerns that have been raised about CEA and others in the community caring too much about PR concerns; I think truthfully saying what you believe — carefully and with compassion — is almost always more important than anything else), but it might be a little while before I get round to that.
- 20 Jan 2023 19:52 UTC; 46 points) 's comment on FLI FAQ on the rejected grant proposal controversy by (
- 4 Mar 2023 19:23 UTC; 20 points) 's comment on Nick Bostrom should step down as Director of FHI by (
The following is my personal opinion, not CEA’s.
If this is true it’s absolutely horrifying. FLI needs to give a full explanation of what exactly happened here and I don’t understand why they haven’t. If FLI did knowingly agree to give money to a neo-Nazi group, that’s despicable. I don’t think people who would do something like that ought to have any place in this community.
- 20 Jan 2023 1:12 UTC; 247 points) 's comment on FLI FAQ on the rejected grant proposal controversy by (
- 26 Jun 2023 9:54 UTC; 6 points) 's comment on [Linkpost] FLI alleged to have offered funding to far right foundation by (
- 26 Jun 2023 9:05 UTC; 3 points) 's comment on How CEA’s communications team is thinking about EA communications at the moment by (
Hi Jeremiah. I was the hiring manager here and I think there’s been something of a misunderstanding here: I don’t think this is an accurate summary of why we made the decision we did. It feels weird to discuss this in public, but I consent to you publishing the full rejection email we sent, if you would like.
I’m very sorry for your loss and apologise for jumping to conclusions about why there wasn’t an immediate statement.
- 20 Jan 2023 16:40 UTC; 32 points) 's comment on FLI FAQ on the rejected grant proposal controversy by (
- 20 Jan 2023 20:49 UTC; 3 points) 's comment on FLI FAQ on the rejected grant proposal controversy by (
Thanks for sharing this. However it doesn’t really answer the core question of why FLI ever thought this was okay. “We ultimately decided to reject it because of what our subsequent due diligence uncovered” — given that your brother is a writer there, did you not know beforehand that Nya Dagbladet publishes horrific, racist content? I find it hard to believe this was not known until the due diligence stage.
Hi — thanks for the question.
In April, Effective Ventures purchased Wytham Abbey and some land around it (but <1% of the 2,500 acre estate you’re suggesting). Wytham is in the process of being established as a convening centre to run workshops and meetings that bring together people to think seriously about how to address important problems in the world. The vision is modelled on traditional specialist conference centres, e.g. Oberwolfach, The Rockefeller Foundation Bellagio Center or the Brocher Foundation.
The purchase was made from a large grant made specifically for this. There was no money from FTX or affiliated individuals or organizations.
- Why did CEA buy Wytham Abbey? by 6 Dec 2022 14:46 UTC; 154 points) (
- 6 Dec 2022 16:22 UTC; 33 points) 's comment on Why did CEA buy Wytham Abbey? by (
The most relevant bit of the Page Six article:
A press release heralding the launch of Henry Elkus’ startup Helena — which said it “brings together global influencers to create positive world change,” but remained, at best, hazy on exactly how — also claimed that luminaries from pop star Selena Gomez to Gen. Stanley McChrystal were on board in various roles.
But when we asked Gomez’s publicist about her role, we got a curt, “She’s not involved.”
Henry explained the discrepancy to Page Six: “Selena was asked directly to be part of the group. We haven’t been dealing with her press team.”
Gawker reported that a prominent Harvard scholar, Jennifer McCrea, also denied being involved, saying through her rep, “It must be a different Jennifer McCrea.” Henry oddly countered to Page Six, “We’ve had the pleasure of working with Jennifer McCrea since last October.”
- 3 Feb 2023 16:02 UTC; 42 points) 's comment on Questions about OP grant to Helena by (
Hi — I think this post overstates the level of program-level centralisation here.
The EVF and CEA US boards provide overall oversight and governance of the projects and their executive directors, and will occasionally step in to change something important. But they have largely delegated program-level responsibility to each project’s executive director, who each set their own strategy for how to best have a positive impact on the world.
In practice, those strategies do differ: to give a couple of examples, CEA and 80,000 Hours have pretty different approaches to cause prioritisation; while Asterisk (a CEA US project) published a very critical review of What We Owe the Future (a book written by an EVF project lead and board member). The boards also very much want EA work to flourish outside of the EVF and CEA US governance structures — many of the grants made by the EA Infrastructure Fund support this work.
Really great post, thanks for writing this! EA’s animal successes are indeed really impressive. I want to push back a bit on “no one cares about” this though. The “good things” forum post and Twitter thread I did back in December both did well; much of EAG programming is about wins; Animal Liberation Now, which has got a ton of attention, contains a whole chapter on progress in animal welfare; and indeed your own post got a ton of upvotes.
I do agree that we could always do more to celebrate and reflect on wins like this — I’m just pushing back because I think saying “no one cares about” can actually perpetuate the negative environment it’s trying to fight.
I resonated with this post a lot. Thank you for writing it.
Thanks for this. I agree that we’ve been neglecting social media; the main reason for this as far as I can tell is that no one at CEA was primarily focused on comms/marketing until I was hired in September; then other events proved to be attention-stealing.
Social media is going to be a major part of the communications strategy I outlined here; I expect you’ll see us being more active in the coming months. https://forum.effectivealtruism.org/posts/mFGZtPKTjqrfeHHsH/how-cea-s-communications-team-is-thinking-about-ea
I’m really excited that this is happening. As far as I can tell, there’s a dearth of effective, Zakat-compliant giving options; this is a huge step towards remedying that.
Hi! Thanks for this post. I do want to highlight that there is EA-linked work on nuclear security — most notably Carl Robichaud’s program at Longview Philanthropy. From conversations I’ve had with Carl, there are some really interesting and potentially very cost-effective interventions in this space. It certainly sounds like there’s room for collaboration here!
Thanks for calling me out on this — I agree that I was too hasty to call for a response.
I’m glad that FLI has shared more information, and that they are rethinking their procedures as a result of this. This FAQ hasn’t completely alleviated my concerns about what happened here — I think it’s worrying that something like this can get to the stage it did without it being flagged (though again, I’m glad FLI seems to agree with this). And I also think that it would have been better if FLI had shared some more of the FAQ info with Expo too.
I do regret calling for FLI to speak up sooner, and I should have had more empathy for the situation they were in. I posted my comments not because I wanted to throw FLI under the bus for PR reasons, but because I was feeling upset; coming on the heels of the Bostrom situation I was worried that some people in the EA community were racist or at least not very sensitive about how discussions of race-related things can make people feel. At the time, I wanted to do my bit to make it clear — in particular to other non-white people who felt similarly to me — that EA isn’t racist. But I could and should have done that in a much better way. I’m sorry.